Jeff7
Lifer
- Jan 4, 2001
- 41,596
- 20
- 81
The guy was a thief who made himself look good by giving away something that wasn't his.
The debate over the legacy of Aaron Swartz
"I would suggest that many in that [open access] movement are highly naive about how the world works and whether or not some of this information would actually be pulled together if there wasn't someone paying for it,"
"All of the charges were based on established case law. Indeed, once the decision to charge the case had been made, the charges brought here were pretty much what any good federal prosecutor would have charged."
"You have to source the publications. It also means going out and licensing and tracking down the copyright holders for all these things, and getting them to agree to give you the rights to bring the stuff online and who you can make it accessible to and doing that in a way they find conducive with their own objectives."
Same with the 60s, man. Boomers were the first en mass generation who got things like allowances, cars for graduation, fashionable brand name clothing and shit for basically doing nothing. Their parents worked 60 hours per week thinking it was to give their kids opportunities or things that would make them happier children, who then learned absolutely fucking nothing and thought that everything should be free (you know, like all the stuff was when they grew up).But reddit and wikileaks, because everything is free! This is the kind of mentality why I can't stand reddit; just an echo chamber of IQ mean reversion and minimal critical thought.
Aaron did not hack the JSTOR website for all reasonable definitions of hack. Aaron wrote a handful of basic python scripts that first discovered the URLs of journal articles and then used curl to request them.
...
I cannot speak as to the criminal implications of accessing an unlocked closet on an open campus, one which was also used to store personal effects by a homeless man. I would note that trespassing charges were dropped against Aaron and were not part of the Federal case.
Same with the 60s, man. Boomers were the first en mass generation who got things like allowances, cars for graduation, fashionable brand name clothing and shit for basically doing nothing.
The disco bit almost made me spew mah drink. I may actually be a half-generation too late. A sizable youth culture with a lot more freedom and not much connection to the toil of their parents (or society in general) sprang-up even earlier than 1960s, though I think they were sorta the exception and belonged to a decidedly affluent minority. e.g. the hot-rodding, cruising, concert going, partying, and rock-n-roll youth cultures of the 1950s. Where do teenagers in the 1950s get the money to support such a hobby like street racing and hot-rodding? I started working at 16 (part time) and could barely afford to keep my 10 year-old used car maintained, running, and insured, forget Hi-Po engines, racing fuel, tires, transmission mods, etc.Kids have been getting allowances from their parents for much longer than that. Anyway, I think you're a generation early there. I was among the last of the boomers, born in the 15 years after WW2 ended, and the years from 1960 to 1980 were not a cakewalk of conspicuous consumption.
Don't these two statements seem a bit contradictory?
I have to think that a reasonable definition of "hack" has to include the illicit tapping of unauthorized equipment into a computer network for the purposes of downloading stored files.
I suppose you can argue that MIT shouldn't have made it so easy for Aaron to access their network equipment. But leaving the keys in your car's ignition doesn't absolve a person who steals it.
What also seems crystal clear is that Aaron was very intentionally engaging in a pattern of "civil disobedience" that he must have realized would inevetiably lead to his prosecution under the laws he was trying to change. He had to see this coming; he shouldn't have been surprised.
I'm very sorry he committed suicide. That said, it doesn't make sense to blame his suicide on the prosecutors who were part of a confrontation that Aaron intentionally triggered.
And then you have people like unokitty that are intentionally disingenuous about the topic (JSTOR is totally taking other people's stuff w/o permission and charging for it!), because they see lying as a way to further their cause:
Regarding JSTOR what I said was that I never gave them permission to sell access to any of my work. What that means is that I never gave them permission to sell access to my work. That was true when I said it. It is true now
So what you are saying Darwin at work? What he did was wrong nothing is free people making the database had costs even if the material was given to them. He was brilliant yet very foolish and naive perhaps he was raised by hippies. I think the real issue here is did he deserve 35 years in prison and 1 mil fine. In my opinion no that was too severe. What would have been a good punishment for his crimes? People are also calling him "kid" He was a 26 year old man who was a self made millionaire. If he grew up perhaps he could have contributed to society in a meaningful way other than throwing others work away because he felt it was the right thing to do.he knew what he was doing was maybe a little questionable. its obvious a company scanned all that stuff even if it was free, and you are paying for the scanning. you accept those risks if you are going to do them. if im driving 5mph over the speed limit and not hurting anyone, its possible they will give me a ticket.
then he kills himself when he gets caught.
he's not a martyr. if he's anything he's a product of our world where being an emotionally fragile person doesn't get you labeled a "pussy" anymore, but gets you called "depressed".
hell if you take paris hiltons money away she might be depressed. that doesnt make me sympathetic at all when kids in the world are living in cardboard houses in haiti and starving and those kids are "depressed". oh well, we lost a priviledged brilliant child who couldn't accept even the possibility of consequences for something he did. too bad, guess we cant seperate the brilliance from the weak psychological makeup.
I think the real issue here is did he deserve 35 years in prison and 1 mil fine. In my opinion no that was too severe.
At very worse, it should have been like 1 year for trespassing or something like that.
A year?! 40 hours community service, and a stern tongue lashing would have been above and beyond. Anything else is ridiculous. MIT is built on "hacking". That's what they do, and they've made it into an art form. While Swartz wasn't a student there, he was carrying on an age old MIT tradition. This is government overreach, plain and simple.
You said it, but it's not unfair to question your certainty. I have never written for academic journals, however I have published 20 or so pieces in software trade magazines, so I know what sorts of rights are typically acquired by the publisher, and which are retained by the author. I also know those arrangements vary quite a bit based on many factors, so I accept that you may be right. In the commercial world periodical publishers almost always get the right to republish the work in annuals and compendiums, at least.
The issue is one of proportionality. No one is saying that Aaron wasn't a nuisance. He never denied that he walked onto an open campus, into an unlocked wiring closet, and plugged in a laptop and registered as a guest on the MIT network.
"Academic publishing is an odd system the authors are not paid for their writing, nor are the peer reviewers (theyre just more unpaid academics), and in some fields even the journal editors are unpaid. Sometimes the authors must even pay the publishers. And yet scientific publications are some of the most outrageously expensive pieces of literature you can buy . As far as I can tell, the money paid for access today serves little significant purpose except to perpetuate dead business models."
-- From So when does academic publishing get disrupted?
Uno
You make a fair point, however there's a big difference with being threatened with the maximum penalities possible under the law and with actually getting them.
Forgive me for not providing links, but what I've read makes it clear that negotiations over a possible plea deal were ongoing and that the offer by the prosecuter included some (~ 6 months ) of jail time. While Aaron did and many others might believe that any jail time is too much, this does (at least for me) largely undercut the proportionality laments.
I also read that his defense attorney was confident Aaron would be acquitted when/if the case went to trial.
Again, Aaron had to anticipate what the government's reponse to his intentional flouting of these laws would be. He made a mistake by starting down this path if he wasn't prepared follow it to its end.
IMHO it is unfair for people to blame the government for Aaron's suicide. I shake my head when I read statements by his family that "he was killed by the government" and that his death was "the product of a criminal justice system rife with intimidation and prosecutorial overreach."
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/...ernment_n_2482646.html?utm_hp_ref=mostpopular
